Click on each incorrect pronoun, and type the correct pronoun in the text box. Check your spelling, capitalization, punctuation, and spacing,
When my twin brother and me had a birthday, Mom would bake us a cake. (The choice of cake was our's, but Ted and me always wanted chocolate.) Anyhow, Grandma would come over and maybe some friends and cousins. They'd sing happy birthday to Ted and I, we'd blow out the candles, and everyone would have cake and ice cream. Birthdays are a lot different today. The four-year-old boy who lives in the apartment above our's had a Chuck E. Cheese party. Him and several friends went to a Chuck E. Cheese restaurant where they had pizza, prizes, and a clown. A friend's daughter had a theme party when she turned seven. The choice of party theme was her's: dress up, tea time, ballerina, Disney, or beach. Once that decision was made, the professional party planner took over, at a cost of $25 per child. Someone else gave his child a scuba diving birthday party—in a heated pool, of course. Apparently, children compete by using their parties. They are afraid that friends won't come to their's if the parties are not unusual enough. Between you and I, this extravagance isn't healthy. Giving them kinds of parties can't be teaching children good values.